From the Paradise Papers, anti-dumping rules, the protection of consumers online to the 2017 Lux Prize and asylum seekers law, here are the 5 numbers to take away from the plenary.

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More than 13.4 million documents have been scrutinised in the Paradise Papers leak. The European Parliament is asking EU countries to strengthen the fight against tax evasion. For the first time worldwide, EU trade rules will require partners outside the EU to meet international social and environmental standards, to prevent dumping. 37% of online shops and booking websites didn't respect EU rules in 2014. New rules were approved in order to better protect consumers. Sámi Blood is the winner of the 2017 Lux Film Prize, for the best of European cinema. The film sheds a light on the discriminated Sámi people, and will be subtitled in the EU's 24 official languages. 1.3 million people applied for asylum inside the EU in 2016. Lawmakers agreed to start negotiations on the so-called Dublin reform, to ensure a fair share of asylum seekers between EU countries.

MEPs approved the shrinking of the House from 751 to 705 MEPs after Brexit, set a date for potential new members to join the EU, and voted on issues ranging from geo-blocking to female genital mutilation, to daylight savings time.

At February’s plenary, members discuss the end of geoblocking and how to configure the Parliament after Brexit. Turning to the environment, they also look at decarbonisation schemes and a new pesticides committee. Croatia’s PM debates with MEPs on the future of the EU.